【Crypto World】A Hong Kong-listed company has officially announced a major move—entering the Web3 blockchain sector. This company plans to leverage its software technology expertise to do a few things: first, provide full-chain professional software development services for exchange project parties; second, build its own trading platform and launch a compliant digital asset exchange in the short term; third, develop wallets and public chain technology simultaneously. Through these actions, they aim to cover the entire digital asset business process from trading, clearing, to asset custody. This reflects traditional listed companies’ increasing focus on the Web3 market—not only providing technical services to earn intermediary fees but also actively participating themselves. Whether it can successfully implement remains to be seen, but at least this signals that digital asset trading and infrastructure development are attracting more and more capable institutional players.
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JustHodlIt
· 20h ago
Hong Kong-listed companies are venturing into exchanges, wallets, and public chains—completing a full set of actions... Relying on technological accumulation to break into Web3, this time it's for real.
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0xDreamChaser
· 20h ago
The Hong Kong stock market is moving, and traditional giants can't sit still anymore.
Hong Kong-listed company officially announces Web3 strategy: planning to establish compliant exchanges, wallets, and public chains
【Crypto World】A Hong Kong-listed company has officially announced a major move—entering the Web3 blockchain sector. This company plans to leverage its software technology expertise to do a few things: first, provide full-chain professional software development services for exchange project parties; second, build its own trading platform and launch a compliant digital asset exchange in the short term; third, develop wallets and public chain technology simultaneously. Through these actions, they aim to cover the entire digital asset business process from trading, clearing, to asset custody. This reflects traditional listed companies’ increasing focus on the Web3 market—not only providing technical services to earn intermediary fees but also actively participating themselves. Whether it can successfully implement remains to be seen, but at least this signals that digital asset trading and infrastructure development are attracting more and more capable institutional players.